Skin fibroblast cells were obtained from a small piece of an ear of leopard, lion, and tiger collected postmortem and attempts were made to synchronize the skin fibroblasts at G0/G1 of cell cycle using three different approaches. Efficiency of the approaches was tested following interspecies nuclear transfer with rabbit oocytes as recipient cytoplasm. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting revealed that the proportion of G0/G1 cells increased significantly (P < 0.05) when cells subjected to serum starvation, contact inhibition, and 3 mM sodium butyrate (NaBu) treatment when compared with cycling cells. However, 3 mM NaBu treatment caused alterations in cell morphology and increase in dead cells. Thus, interspecies nuclear transfer was carried out using fibroblast cells subjected to contact inhibition for 72 h, serum starvation for 48 h, and cells treated with 1.0 mM NaBu for 48 h. The fusion rates, the proportion of fused couplets that cleaved to two-cell and developed to blastocyst, were highest in all three species when the donor cells were treated with 1.0 mM NaBu for 48 h. But, the blastocyst percentage of interspecies nuclear embryos (5-6%) was significantly lower when compared with rabbit-rabbit nuclear transfer embryos (22.9%). In conclusion, fibroblast cells of leopard, lion, and tiger were successfully synchronized and used for the development of blastocysts using rabbit oocytes as recipient cytoplasm.
Purpose The levels and timing of expression of genes like BCLXL, HDAC1 and pluripotency marker genes namely, OCT4, SOX2, NANOG and KLF4 are known to influence preimplantation embryo development. Despite this information, precise understanding of their influence during preimplantation embryo development is lacking. The present study attempts to compare the expression of these genes in the in vivo and in vitro developed preimplantation embryos. Methods The in vivo and in vitro developed rabbit embryos collected at distinct developmental stages namely, pronuclear, 2 cell, 4 cell, 8 cell, 16 cell, Morula and blastocyst were compared at the transcriptional and translational levels using Real Time PCR and immunocytochemical studies respectively. Results The study establishes the altered levels of candidate genes at the transcriptional level and translational level with reference to the zygotic genome activation (ZGA) phase of embryo development in the in vivo and in vitro developed embryos. The expression of OCT4, KLF4, NANOG and SOX2 genes were higher in the in vitro developed embryos whereas and HDAC1 was lower. BCLXL expression had its peak at ZGA in in vivo developed embryos. Protein expression of all the candidate genes was observed in the embryos. BCLXL, KLF4 and NANOG exhibited diffused localisation whereas HDAC1, OCT4, and SOX2 exhibited nuclear localisation. Conclusions This study leads to conclude that BCLXL peak expression at the ZGA phase may be a requirement for embryo development. Further expression of all the candidate genes was influenced by ZGA phase of development at the transcript level, but not at the protein level.
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